Heller Investment Co. v. Southern Title & Trust Co.

61 P.2d 807, 17 Cal. App. 2d 202, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 552
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 22, 1936
DocketCiv. 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 61 P.2d 807 (Heller Investment Co. v. Southern Title & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heller Investment Co. v. Southern Title & Trust Co., 61 P.2d 807, 17 Cal. App. 2d 202, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 552 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

The individual defendants are officers of the corporate defendant. Plaintiff does not complain of the judgment in their favor. We will therefore treat the case as though the corporate defendant were the sole respondent. Plaintiff and defendant are corporations organized under the laws of the state of California. Plaintiff owned four hundred seventy-nine shares of the common capital stock of the defendant which stock had a par value of one hundred dollars a share. The business of defendant was such that it came under the banking department and also the division of insurance of the department of investments of California.

In 1933 the assets of defendant became impaired and in order to enable it to continue in business it was necessary to secure new and additional capital. At that time it had an authorized capital of five hundred thousand dollars, divided into five thousand shares of common stock of the par value of one hundred dollars each. There was issued and outstanding four thousand one hundred shares of this stock.

Proceedings were had to amend its articles of incorporation fixing its authorized capital stock at five hundred fifty thousand dollars, divided into three thousand five hundred shares of common stock of the par value of one hundred dollars each, and eight thousand shares of preferred stock of the par value of twenty-five dollars each. The preferred stock is entitled to receive annual six per cent cumulative *204 dividends and may be retired after one year from the date of its issue upon payment to its owners of its par value and all accrued and unpaid dividends. Each share of the stock of each class is given one vote so it is apparent that the potential control of the corporation as far. as the voting power of the stock is concerned passed from the common to the preferred stockholders.

At the meeting of the stockholders held for the purpose of acting upon the proposed changes in the stock structure of the corporation four thousand seventy-one shares out of the total of four thousand one hundred issued shares were represented. Three thousand three hundred seventy-four shares were voted in favor of the change and six hundred -ninety-seven shares against it. The statement is made in the brief of defendant, and it is not disputed, that plaintiff is the only shareholder now opposing the change.

As the number of shares of the “common stock were reduced the corporation required the exchange of such stock on the basis of seven-tenths of one share of the new stock for each' share of the old stock. Plaintiff refused to make this exchange, demanded the issuance to it of four hundred seventy-nine shares of the new "common stock in exchange for its surrender of its like number of shares of the old stock and upon the refusal of defendant to issue the new stock in that amount plaintiff instituted this action to compel its issuance. The trial court gave judgment for defendant and this appeal followed.

The propositions relied upon by plaintiff for a reversal of the judgment may be thus briefly summarized: That defendant cannot take away from plaintiff three-tenths of its capital stock without its consent and without compensation; that the right of a stockholder in a corporation to vote his stock is a property right that cannot be abridged without his consent and without compensation; that the proceedings changing the stock structure of defendant were void as none of the resolutions adopted by either the directors or stockholders in the process of the change required the defendant to first offer for sale the preferred stock to the existing common stockholders before offering it for sale to others; that under subdivision one of section 348a of the Civil Code the defendant cannot force the exchange of stock and that- an exchange must be voluntarily made, if made at all.

*205 In arguing the first two assignments of error plaintiff cites sections thirteen and sixteen of article I of the state Constitution, and the fourteenth amendment to the federal Constitution. From plaintiff’s argument it would appear that section ten of article I of the federal Constitution would be a more appropriate citation. Plaintiff bases its arguments on the contentions that the proceedings in question deprived it of valuable property rights without compensation and violated a contract between it and the corporation, and, upon the provisions of subdivision one of section 348a of the Civil Code under which the argument is made, that the exchange of a given number of shares of the old stock for a lesser number of shares of the new stock can only be made when voluntary and when it is consented to by all the stockholders. It further argues that the new preferred stock cannot be authorized without, the consent of all the stockholders.

In 1933 the legislature recast the corporation laws of the state of California. (Stats. 1933, chap. 533.) Sections 294, 297, 326b, 348, 348a, 362, 362a and 362b of the Civil Code seem to be controlling here and fully uphold the judgment of the trial court, if they do not violate the provisions of the state or federal Constitutions. It is not suggested that the proceedings taken by defendant to change its stock structure violated any of these code sections, if the exchange of stock need not be voluntary, and, if the directors and stockholders, in the resolutions passed, need not require that the new preferred stock be offered for sale to the existing stockholders before offering it for sale to others. It should be observed that while none of the resolutions required that the preferred stock be first offered to the stockholders, the permit to sell this stock issued by the insurance commissioner contained such a requirement and the stock was actually offered to the common stockholders, none of whom purchased any of it. Pursuant to the permit five thousand one hundred twenty shares of the preferred stock were thereupon sold to others at its par value of twenty-five dollars per share and the full purchase price of one hundred twenty-eight thousand dollars was paid into the treasury of the corporation.

In each of the two Constitutions of California (art. IV, sec. 31, Const. 1849; art. XII, sec. 1, Const. 1879) there *206 was reserved to the state the right to alter or ■ amend the state laws governing corporations. This reserved power has been frequently discussed and has, without exception, been upheld and construed as giving the state the right to change the contract of a stockholder with a corporation. A late decision of the Supreme Court on that question (Rainey v. Michel, 6 Cal. (2d) 259 [57 Pac. (2d) 932, 105 A. L. R. 148) would seem to be controlling here and obviate the citation of other California authorities. In 1931 (Stats. 1931, p. 338) the legislature passed an act changing the prior liability of a stockholder in a state bank in relation to payment of the debts of the corporation. The defendant Michel made the same argument that is being made by the plaintiff in the instant ease and urged that the Bank Act of 1931 violated the federal and state Constitutions by changing the obligations of the contracts of stockholders who acquired their stock prior to the effective date of the present bank act. In disposing of this contention in the Rainey case the Supreme Court said:

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Bluebook (online)
61 P.2d 807, 17 Cal. App. 2d 202, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heller-investment-co-v-southern-title-trust-co-calctapp-1936.